New Delhi :
Stock markets will be driven by the RBI's interest rate decision,
tariff-related developments, global trends and trading activity of foreign
investors in this holiday-shortened week, analysts said.
Macroeconomic
data announcements, such as industrial production and HSBC PMI manufacturing
data, would also be tracked by investors.
Stock
markets would remain closed on Thursday for Dussehra and Mahatma Gandhi
Jayanti.
"Markets
step into a data-heavy week, where both domestic and global cues will dictate
momentum. On the domestic front, industrial production data and the RBI’s
policy decision will be in focus, along with the expiry of September
derivatives contracts, which could add to volatility.
"Globally,
updates on the US-India trade deal will be closely tracked," Ajit Mishra,
SVP, Research, Religare Broking Ltd, said.
India and
the US have decided to continue negotiations for early conclusion of a mutually
beneficial bilateral trade agreement, the Commerce Ministry said on Friday.
"At
this point, all eyes are on US–India trade relations for a possible relief
rally.
On the domestic front, the upcoming RBI policy on 1st October is
crucial, with the street divided on whether a rate cut will materialise. IIP
data and festive season sales updates will also be important triggers,"
Santosh Meena, Head of Research at Swastika Investmart, said.
Globally,
US macro data, dollar index movement, and crude oil prices will drive near-term
direction. Above all, FII flows remain the key determinant for market trend,
Meena added.
Last week,
the BSE benchmark tanked 2,199.77 points or 2.66 per cent, and the NSE Nifty
dropped 672.35 points or 2.65 per cent.
Vinod Nair,
Head of Research, Geojit Investments Limited, said, "Indian equities
closed the week on a subdued note, with broad-based sectoral declines. The IT
index came under early pressure amid concerns over rising H-1B visa costs,
compounded by Accenture’s subdued outlook."
Sentiment
weakened further as fresh US tariffs on pharmaceutical products led to a sharp
sell-off in pharma counters. Mid- and small-cap stocks corrected more sharply
than large caps, reflecting stress from their stretched valuations.
The rupee
continued to weaken, weighed down by ongoing FII outflows and heightened
geopolitical risks stemming from US trade actions.
In contrast, gold sustained
its appeal as a safe-haven asset, supported by global trade tensions, a
depreciating rupee, steady central bank purchases, and uncertainty over the
Fed’s policy path, Nair said.
Siddhartha
Khemka - Head of Research, Wealth Management, Motilal Oswal Financial Services
Ltd, said, "In terms of macro-economic data, markets will track RBI’s
interest rate decision on October 1st, the US consumer confidence data and
manufacturing PMI of India, China, and the US."